Month: July 2021

Cowboy Day – Pepsi Cola Cake with Broiled Peanut Butter Frosting

Yippee Ky Yay Cake Lovers, number 5 is alive!!!!  This weekend, courtesy of the nicest man on the Internet,  Greg Swenson, we are celebrating Cowboy Day with a Cookalong.  I have chosen to bake a cake (because every celebration needs one) from Greg’s book, Recipes for Rebels:  In The Kitchen with James Dean – and oh (cow)boy, what a cake it is.  Pepsi Cola Cake with Broiled Peanut Butter Frosting.

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Pepsi Cola Cake wth Broiled Peanut Butter Frosting

You might be wondering what is the connection between a cake made from Pepsi and Cowboys? Well, hear me out here. It is a little like one of those puzzles you used to do at school where you change one letter at a time to turn one word into another…

But here me out:

James Dean played a cowboy in the film Giant
James Dean’s first paid acting job was in a Pepsi Commercial
Pepsi is a key ingredient in this cake.

Cowboy to cake in less steps than it will take you to go from bath to tubs!

Cowboy Day 2021

Good lord, just look at that face!!!  If that is not a textbook definition of impossibly handsome, I do not know what is.

Something that is most definitely not impossibly handsome is the Pepsi-Cola Cake.  It is a massive brute of a thing (might one say a Giant?) that erupted like a volcano in my oven.  It reminded me of the ads we used to have for Picnic bars – deliciously ugly.

 

Pepsi Cola Calke

I mean, ok, it doesn’t look quite as much like a pooh as a Picnic bar but at the point of removal from the oven, it did not look good.

But as the picnic ad states that’s what wrappers are for. And the wrapping on the Pepsi-cola cake is some divine Peanut Butter frosting.

Pepsi Cola Cake 4

I mean it’s still not the prettiest cake in the world. But, do not let it’s somewhat less than gorgeous faced fool you.  Remember the delicious part of deliciously ugly?  Well this cake has a ton of delicious!  The cake itself is moist and fudgy, a little like a brownie.  The slight slatiness in the  peanut butter frosting is a perfect accompaniment to the sweetness of the cake.  Beware though the Pepsi Cake is not just rich.  It is filthy rich!!!

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I have a sweet tooth and even I would recommend cutting what you think is a normal-sized slice of cake then cutting that in two.  And bada bing bada boom that’s elevenses and afternoon tea sorted!!!!

Pepsi Cola Cake – Recipe

So, the recipe for this cake made me laugh.  I love the way they ask for non-sweetened cocoa powder.  I mean, when you already have 2 cups of sugar and a cup of Pepsi in your cake I guess you have to draw the line somewhere.

Here’s the recipe!

 

 

Giant 2

 

This was so much fun!  I loved cooking this cake and being able to take part in the world wide cookalong to celebrate Cowboy Day 2021!  Thank you Greg for organising and inviting me to contribute!

Have a great week everyone!!!!

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Date and Frangipane Tart

Hello, people of the internet.  Greetings from lockdown 5 thanks to a few people in Sydney having a “Let them eat cake” attitude to the health of the people of Victoria.  In return, we are going to stay at home and eat a delicious Date and Frangipane tart so, in the long run, we win.  In the short term?  F*** you Gladys.  Your lax excuse for a lockdown in Sydney has put so many Victorian lives in danger.

Date and Frangipane Tart1

Well.  That was truly not how I intended to start this post.  But sometimes you just need to give in to what your subconscious mind needs to say.  Now my little rant is over, this is how I meant to start.  What do an almond cream filling for pastries, a tropical flower, stinky gloves and a 16th century Italian Maquis all have in common?

The answer is that all are called Frangipane.

Back in the day, the leather gloves worn by the nobles would often get very stinky so Frangipani the man invented a bitter almond perfume to remove the reek from said gloves.  This perfume was either made from, or inspired by, the scent of the frangipani flower.

French chefs of the time were inspired by the scent of the perfume to make an almond pastry filling which they called frangipane

Date and Frangipane Tart3

I could not find any pictures of the eponymous Frangipane.  So here is a random 16th century Italian nobleman with some tart, flowers and, of course, some stinky gloves.

Frangipane the Man

Seriously though, this tart is delicious.  And the apple juice and brandy caramel sauce?  That Italian nobleman will be chef kissing and announcing “Bella, bella”.

Here’s the recipe from Neil Perry via Good Food

Have a great week!  I’ll be at home, planning something very special for this coming weekend!

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Damn The Weather – The Sittaford Mystery

Hello crime readers and food lovers!  Today we are drinking with the Dame because the Sittaford Mystery, as wonderful a story as it is, (and it is an absolute cracker) did not have the most inspiring food within its pages.  So, I am playing with the atmospherics of the book and sharing a cocktail called Damn The Weather with Dame Agatha.

Damn The Weather1

 

The Sit-tea -ford Mystery?

Despite having hardly any food and passing references to generic cocktails, what the Sittaford Mystery has in abundance is tea:

  • p73 – A good cry and good cup of tea – there’s nothing to beat them, and a nice cup of tea you shall have at once, my dear
  • p74 – I’ll send the tea up to you
  • p75 cup of tea
  • p 76 Strong tea, bread and butter. Devonshire cream and hard-boiled eggs
  • p 86  I ought to be able to produce  a quiet cup of tea,
  • p178 Tea was laid ready.  Mrs Willett poured out
  • p179 She must be sipping tea with that determined ladykiller Captain Wyatt
  • p186 A cup of tea

Despite its prevalence, there was no way I was going to do a post on the perfect cup of tea.  Least of all because I don’t like it.

And bread and butter and hard-boiled eggs also seem a little….well…basic.

Next to tea, this is quite a boozy book with more than one reference being made to generic “cocktails” and also to brandy. I found a recipe on Difford’s for a cocktail called Damn The Weather which seemed very fitting to the setting of the book. Let’s see why.

The Sittaford Mystery – The Setting

The scene that met his eyes was typical of the English countryside as depicted on Christmas cards and in old fashioned melodramas.  Everywhere was snow, deep drifts of it….up here on the fringe of Dartmoor it had attained a depth of several feet”

– The Sittaford Mystery, Agatha Christie

Sittaford is a tiny village, pretty much cut off from the rest of the world due to the terrible weather.  Which makes it the perfect setting for one of Christie’s closed circle mysteries.

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The Sittaford Mystery – The Plot

Mrs. Willett, the winter tenant of Captain Trevelyan, and her daughter Violet have invited guests for afternoon tea.  After eating, the group decide to do a bit of table-turning (ie summoning the dead).  A message comes from beyond telling them that Captain Trevelyan is dead.

A Short Aside on Table Turning

To my mind table-turning has to be the most inefficient way of contacting the spirits ever.  From what I can gather the table rocks back and forth for each letter…so even to spell out the first part of the message TREV DEAD  that is 20 + 18 +5 +22 rocks of a table.  65 rocks of a table to spell a four-letter word? No thank you.  How long did that take?  How bored do you have to be for that to become viable entertainment?  I mean even trapped in a snow storm  Dartmoor in the 1920’s I would be spelling out H-E-L-L -N -O on the table turning.

 

Anyway, after they have spent HOURS ( my words, not Christie’s) getting that 8 letter message, Major Burnaby, the Captain’s best friend decides to trek the 6 miles on foot to the Captain’s house to make sure he is all right.

He is not.

Trev is indeed dead, having been hit over the head with a sandbag.  Estimated time of death?  Five twenty-five.  The exact same time as the ghostly message from beyond.

(Cue spooky X-files type music).

As if that is not enough, we also have:

  • An errant nephew being arrested for the murder
  • An escaped criminal
  • A reporter keen to get a good story
  • The mystery of just why the Willetts wanted to rent Sittaford House in the first instance
  • Retired police inspectors
  • Newspaper prizes
  • Boots hidden in the chimney
  • Aunts in the know and,
  • Maybe my favourite Christie heroine yet, the adorably plucky Emily Trefusis.  (I am going to forgive her madly standing by her man, even though he is an idiot) because I love everything else about her.

The Sittaford Mystery has an average rating of 3.76 on Good Reads and comes in at # 26 at the time of writing on the All About Agatha podcast rankings.  I feel Iike it a bit better than that but, I have not read all the books yet!.

The Covers

The covers for The Sittaford Mystery (called The `Murder at Hazelmoor in the United States) are amazing!

Sittaford covers collage

I love the nods to the table-turning at the weather and also the dead body on the carpet.  I also like that the French version is called 5:25.  You might also be wondering why some of the titles are called Murder At Hazelmoor and not the Sittaford Mystery.  This was because the American publishers of the book thought their audience would prefer murder to mystery. Tell me, which title do you prefer?

The Recipe – Damn The Weather

You can find the Difford’s guide recipe here.

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Other Food Mentioned in The Sittaford Mystery

Oh, so maybe there was more food than I remembered!  Still the Damn the Weather was a fabulous cocktail.

Just a quick note on the adaptation of The Sittaford Mystery. It’s kind of terrible.  For some reason, they made it a Miss Marple instead of a stand-alone mystery as written.  And to be honest Miss Marple does not do a lot.  It’s worth a watch but it is not the best Christie adaptation out there.

Next up in the Christie list is Peril at End House for anyone who wants to read along.

Have a great week!

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Ratafias

One of the frequent debates we have at our Tasty ReadsCookbook Club is whether cookbooks should have a photo for each recipe.  Most people like something to judge their efforts against. I prefer a photo but I  am content to fly blind if required. Which is a good thing because when making these Ratafias from The Daily News Cookery Book (1953) I had no idea what I was going to end up with!

Thankfully, it was these:

Ratafias 1

But as both Julie Andrews and I are wont to say…let’s start at the very beginning. Ratafiaa are almond flavoured cookies.  If you can imagine an amaretti and a macaron had a love child? It would be a ratafia.  Not as chewy as a macaron, not as crunchy as an amaretti.

Ratafias 2

The Ratafias Recipe

A few notes about this recipe.

  • It calls for soft sugar.  I used normal caster sugar in my recipe but in retrospect, I wonder if they meant icing/confectioner’s sugar.
  • It also calls for Ratafia flavouring which I could not find for love or money  The closest thing I could come to was a Ratafia flavoured liqueur but they were 1) a bit spendy and 2) not readily available locally so I used almond essence.
  • Finally, you can roast your rice flour for around 10 minutes in the oven, until you just see the colour start to turn.  Alternatively, if you have an Indian / Sri Lankan grocery near you, they may sell it as roasted rice flour is used to make hoppers.

Ratafias recipe

The ratafias were really yummy and very easy to make.  They will defintely be on high rotation here.  Also, they are a great way to use up left over eggwhites!

Have a great week friends, sorry I have been so absent from here. It’s been a busy few months.  Hopefully I will start to be able to post more regularly now as things, particualry workwise are starting to calm down!

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